HAVANA - The United States refused to
grant visas to world-renowned Cuban musicians who were invited to
Sunday's Grammy music awards, Cuban officials said.

Cuban singer Ibrahim Ferrer of the Buena Vista Social Club, seen
here in 2003, was denied a visa by the US authorities. (AFP/DDP/File)
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Ibrahim Ferrer, the 76-year-old singer from the Grammy-nominated
Buena Vista Social Club, was dumbfounded to learn that, according to
the Cuban Music Institute, the United States invoked a law that
applies to terrorists, drug dealers and dangerous criminals to deny
him a visa.
"I don't understand because I don't feel I'm a terrorist. I am not,
I can't be," he said at a news conference.
Ferrer has won three Grammys in recent years and has traveled to
the United States in the past.
The other celebrated musicians who were denied visas were guitarist
Manuel Galvan, pianist Guillermo Rubalcaba, percussionist Amadito
Valdes, lute player Barbarito Torres and singer Eugenio Rodriguez.
The Cuban Music Institute called the US action a "new offense
against Cuban culture and people."
"This policy is really hypocritical," said Abel Acosta, vice
minister of culture and president of the music institute. "It's the
most arbitrary in the world. They give visas to whom they want when
they want to."
The Grammy-nominated musicians applied for their visas on December
24 at the US Interests Section in Havana.
The artists were interviewed by US consular officials on December
29 and were told of their visa denial Wednesday.
Last year, Cubans who were nominated to the Latin Grammys in Miami
were also denied entry visas.
The United States broke diplomatic ties with the communist island
more than 40 years ago.
Copyright 2004 AFP